18 patients with post-traumatic visual disease of the optic nerve are presented. In the post-traumatic stage, visual evoked potentials were monitored. In amaurosis there was a high incidence of midface or frontobasal fractures. The severity of the trauma is not correlated with the severity of visual deficits. Flash evoked potential (FEP) findings were different: In most cases there was a correlation of clinical and FEP findings. In some we found false positive potentials in the acute stage. In smaller visual field deficits the alterations of FEP could not be correlated with the clinical disorders. FEP alterations depended on time. The pathophysiological mechanisms are discussed in regard to the pathological findings in 51 unselected autopsies with an investigation of the visual pathway from the intraorbital optic nerve to the visual cortex. Because of the different morphological alterations the clinical, neurological and ophthalmological examination should be followed by standard CT scanning to evaluate intracranial haematomas and by CT scanning with thin slices of the optic nerves and the soft tissue of the orbit. Visual evoked potentials (VEP) and in the unconscious patient, flash evoked potentials (FEP) do not give much more security for therapeutic decisions in comparison with former times. The histological findings do not support the hypothesis that operative decompression is successful.
We report a case of spinal seeding of a pilocytic astrocytoma of the chiasma opticum. Microscopic examination of the optic nerve tumor and the spinal tumor showed the same pathological patterns, without any signs of anaplastic transformation. The clinical course demonstrates the low growth rate of this kind of tumor, but spinal metastasis has not yet been described. We discuss different pathophysiological explanations of this atypical biological behavior with reference to the literature.
Prior to the AIDS-era, elevation of intracranial pressure was known to be a typical complication of cryptococcal meningitis associated with an increased risk of early death. In AIDS-patients, however, the prevalence and clinical significance of this complication are as yet unclear. We analysed clinical features and courses, CSF findings, serological results and neuroimaging scans in acute cryptococcal meningitis in eight patients with AIDS. Five showed symptoms and signs compatible with raised intracranial pressure, which was life-threatening in one and the most probable cause of death in another. Serial monitoring of intracranial pressure together with repeated CSF analysis revealed that severe intracranial pressure elevation in AIDS related cryptococcal meningitis can occur in spite of effective antimycotic treatment, does not depend on an increased CSF/serum osmolality ratio or CSF overproduction and can be associated with normal cranial computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging findings. Our data support the hypothesis that CSF reabsorption failure plays the crucial role in the pathophysiological mechanism. External lumbar drainage may be of benefit in selected cases of acute AIDS related cryptococcal meningitis with persisting life threatening elevation in intracranial pressure and normal computed tomogram.
Chondromas are rare intracranial tumours. Sometimes they occur as a manifestation of a 'generalised chondromatosis'. The authors present a case of sellar chondroma in a patient with Ollier's disease. The tumour showed a mainly suprasellar extension resulting in a chiasmatic syndrome. The pathogenesis of intracranial chondromas, their clinical features, and CT- and MRI-findings are discussed.
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